Report: Bill Belichick snubbed by Pro Football Hall of Fame in first year of eligibility

The inductees are expected to be announced on Feb. 5 at the NFL Honors ceremony in San Francisco.

WASHINGTON — Former Patriots head coach Bill Belichick will not be a first-ballot Hall of Famer, according to multiple media outlets. 

ESPN and CBS Sports reported Tuesday that Belichick, the eight-time Super Bowl-winning coach, fell short of the 40 out of 50 votes needed for induction to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. It is Belichick’s first year of eligibility. 

The 50-person selection committee voted earlier this month.

The Hall of Fame declined to comment before its class of 2026 is announced at NFL Honors in San Francisco on Feb. 5.

The report of Belichick’s snub was met with significant criticism, including from Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who posted on social media: “Insane … don’t even understand how this could be possible.”

Belichick was hired by New England in 2000 and led the franchise to six Super Bowl wins and three other appearances in the title game during an 18-year span from 2001-18. Belichick’s 333 wins in the regular season and playoffs with New England and Cleveland are the second most to Don Shula’s 347. He won AP NFL Coach of the Year three times.

Belichick also was one of the game’s top defensive assistants before taking over in New England, winning two earlier Super Bowls as defensive coordinator for the New York Giants.

Belichick’s career did have blemishes. He was implicated in a sign-stealing scandal dubbed “Spygate” in the 2007 season and was fined $500,000 after the team was caught filming defensive signals from the New York Jets during a game.

Belichick’s tenure in New England ended following the 2023 season. He just finished his first year coaching in college at North Carolina.

Belichick was one of five finalists among coaches, contributors and senior players who last appeared in a game in 2000 or earlier. Patriots owner Robert Kraft was the contributor finalist, with Roger Craig, Ken Anderson and L.C. Greenwood the players.

Between one and three of those finalists will be inducted into the Hall along with between three and five modern-era players from a group of 15 finalists.

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